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1 roductive system disorder among women with a psychiatric diagnosis).
2 BMI < 25), with (n = 14) or without (n = 16) psychiatric diagnosis.
3 BMI < 25), with (n = 14) or without (n = 16) psychiatric diagnosis.
4 rnia, and the second from a two-way study of psychiatric diagnosis.
5 of hazardous alcohol use, and 57% a comorbid psychiatric diagnosis.
6 and their convergence with effects driven by psychiatric diagnosis.
7 change when controlling for demographics or psychiatric diagnosis.
8 in a subsample of women without a history of psychiatric diagnosis.
9 ation, and history of neurodevelopmental and psychiatric diagnosis.
10 ften transdiagnostic) features predating the psychiatric diagnosis.
11 order, compared to when neither parent had a psychiatric diagnosis.
12 story of injection drug use, alcohol use, or psychiatric diagnosis.
13 nism with relevance that spans categories of psychiatric diagnosis.
14 ototype matching is a viable alternative for psychiatric diagnosis.
15 decision whether to include APS as a formal psychiatric diagnosis.
16 demands as a risk factor for absence with a psychiatric diagnosis.
17 iting a review of prior key contributions to psychiatric diagnosis.
18 six control subjects by age, sex, race, and psychiatric diagnosis.
19 scents frequently present with more than one psychiatric diagnosis.
20 al charts to generate a best-estimate DSM-IV psychiatric diagnosis.
21 teristics as well as to physician-reports of psychiatric diagnosis.
22 cal records of 229 inpatients with a primary psychiatric diagnosis.
23 order (PD) or were screened to exclude major psychiatric diagnosis.
24 18% of subjects qualified for another active psychiatric diagnosis.
25 ls with IED (29 054 individuals) had another psychiatric diagnosis.
26 very stable and one participant was given a psychiatric diagnosis.
27 16.43%) had received a neurodevelopmental or psychiatric diagnosis.
28 utistic male individuals received at least 1 psychiatric diagnosis.
29 types over-represented in individuals with a psychiatric diagnosis?
30 eakthrough infections showed similar risk of psychiatric diagnosis (0.91, 0.78-1.07; P = 0.278) but i
31 tment for demographics, pubertal status, and psychiatric diagnosis, 1 hour less of total sleep was as
32 7%) than for children with parents without a psychiatric diagnosis (2.5%), but even in the presence o
33 2004-2005), 102 nurses had an absence with a psychiatric diagnosis, 33 with a diagnosis of depressive
34 52%), HIV/AIDS (49%), renal disease (44%), a psychiatric diagnosis (42%), cerebrovascular disease (41
35 ice as high for children with parents with a psychiatric diagnosis (5.7%) than for children with pare
36 likely than unexposed adults to receive any psychiatric diagnosis (547 [6.2%] vs 47 734 [5.5%]; adju
38 infants were born preterm to fathers with a psychiatric diagnosis, 8,917 of 122,611 (7.3%) infants w
39 rted job demands and sickness absence with a psychiatric diagnosis among 2,784 female nurses working
40 ults, with 20.1% of visits associated with a psychiatric diagnosis among males vs 10.1% among females
41 Twelve patients with FMS and no comorbid psychiatric diagnosis and 7 healthy pain-free controls w
42 l tools might help bypass the imprecision of psychiatric diagnosis and connect measures of behavior t
44 lso studied a more personalized approach, by psychiatric diagnosis and gender, with a focus on bipola
47 d understanding of the harms and benefits of psychiatric diagnosis and misdiagnosis existed, as well
48 s, including age at first registration for a psychiatric diagnosis and number of registrations for ma
49 cal and function sequelae: the risk of a new psychiatric diagnosis and severe physical impairment is
51 d model in women with and without a previous psychiatric diagnosis and to understand the effects of c
52 ude that there have been crucial advances in psychiatric diagnosis and treatment in recent decades; t
53 ite the critical role of self-disturbance in psychiatric diagnosis and treatment, its diverse behavio
55 resent in all suicide subjects regardless of psychiatric diagnosis and were unrelated to postmortem i
56 (including major depression and other major psychiatric diagnosis); and (5) repeated noncompliance.
57 scents with three core manic symptoms and no psychiatric diagnosis, and 126 adolescents matched by ag
58 porality (as determined by study design), 2) psychiatric diagnosis, and 3) specific autoimmune disord
59 subjects, 90% received at least one primary psychiatric diagnosis, and 71% had at least one behavior
60 ~50% of patients with bvFTD receive a prior psychiatric diagnosis, and average diagnostic delay is u
61 iffered by sex, age, seizure types, comorbid psychiatric diagnosis, and different time periods after
62 r instance, findings that help corroborate a psychiatric diagnosis, and findings that indicate import
65 th a pretreatment history of a neurologic or psychiatric diagnosis are at significantly increased ris
66 of 61 control patients (20%) had a new-onset psychiatric diagnosis at 6-month follow-up, which was no
67 regression to examine how the presence of a psychiatric diagnosis at baseline (2005-2009) was associ
69 havior; of these, 520 (11.5%) had received a psychiatric diagnosis at follow-up; 33 of 166 (19.9%) wh
70 ted worse outcomes relative to those with no psychiatric diagnosis but better outcomes compared with
71 to the quest for a biological foundation of psychiatric diagnosis but so far has not yielded clinica
72 rescription for antidepressants, other major psychiatric diagnosis, cancer, venous thrombosis, or inf
74 presenting symptoms, clinical severity, and psychiatric diagnosis compared with European American an
75 relation between pretransplant assessment of psychiatric diagnosis, coping skills, and social support
76 the value of multifaceted assessment, since psychiatric diagnosis, coping style, and psychosocial su
77 ated with higher daily costs, including age, psychiatric diagnosis, deficits in daily living activiti
78 9 patients with a pretreatment neurologic or psychiatric diagnosis developed severe neuropsychiatric
79 visits with a primary or secondary discharge psychiatric diagnosis during warm-season months (May to
80 choanalytic dominance had little interest in psychiatric diagnosis, Edwin Gildea recruited to the Dep
81 ffective disorder and their co-twins without psychiatric diagnosis (except 2 with a history of substa
83 a paradigm shift in the conceptualization of psychiatric diagnosis, from symptom-based syndromes, pop
84 han 90% of people who attempt suicide have a psychiatric diagnosis; however, twin and family studies
85 eriences at ages 11-12 predicted receiving a psychiatric diagnosis in child and adolescent mental hea
89 [SD=2.91], 62% female) to 103 youths with no psychiatric diagnosis (mean age, 13.4 years [SD=2.58], 5
92 ymptoms, insidious onset of movements, and a psychiatric diagnosis of hypochondriasis, factitious dis
93 rticipants were all Swedish residents with a psychiatric diagnosis of interest (attention-deficit/hyp
95 lity rate per 100,000 PEY in relation to the psychiatric diagnosis of the patients participating in p
96 od, 1,268,507 were born to parents without a psychiatric diagnosis, of whom 73,094 (5.8%) were born p
97 e unexposed group, ie, had mothers without a psychiatric diagnosis or a history of purchasing SSRIs.
98 hesized that patients with either a specific psychiatric diagnosis or a specific psychological trait
99 19-52 years, with no current or past axis I psychiatric diagnosis or gynecological or other medical
100 adolescents matched by age and sex, with no psychiatric diagnosis or symptoms, were identified after
101 chotic experiences at ages 11-12 predicted a psychiatric diagnosis or treatment with psychotropic med
103 e PTSD in subjects, whereas having a current psychiatric diagnosis other than PTSD was relatively, bu
104 atients without a pretreatment neurologic or psychiatric diagnosis (P =.001), resulting in a relative
105 stinct groups: control individuals without a psychiatric diagnosis (past or present), individuals wit
106 lation; emergency department visits with any psychiatric diagnosis per 1,000 population; and payer so
107 44; 95% CI, 1.00-5.80; P = .04) and having a psychiatric diagnosis prior to the index attempt (odds r
109 riables, trauma history variables, precancer psychiatric diagnosis, recent life events, and perceived
111 hese genes in N=240 women without a previous psychiatric diagnosis resulted in a cross-sectional pred
112 rges in short-stay facilities with a primary psychiatric diagnosis rose between 1996 and 2007, most d
113 on the mania and psychosis subscales of the Psychiatric Diagnosis Screening Questionnaire, were exam
114 this suggests that individuals with a known psychiatric diagnosis should be questioned about dry eye
115 race, pretreatment history of neurologic or psychiatric diagnosis, spleen size, blood counts, and pe
116 % of those with CWP were estimated to have a psychiatric diagnosis, suggesting that these disorders s
117 Several modifiable risk factors, such as psychiatric diagnosis, suicidal ideation during the curr
118 le, 53% < age 25); 37.5% of completers had a psychiatric diagnosis that emerged after their psychedel
119 deployed to a combat zone with a preexisting psychiatric diagnosis, the cumulative rate of post-OIF/-
120 izophrenia and 45 control subjects without a psychiatric diagnosis underwent clinical evaluation, eye
121 sician-reports of disorders were comparable: Psychiatric diagnosis was associated with higher mortali
128 ht/obese), with (n = 28) or without (n = 12) psychiatric diagnosis, were compared to 30 age- and sex-
129 ht/obese), with (n = 28) or without (n = 12) psychiatric diagnosis, were compared to 30 age- and sex-
130 t History Form criteria and no other primary psychiatric diagnosis, were receiving a mood stabilizer
131 greatly advance biological determination of psychiatric diagnosis, which is critical for the develop
132 Not all people who die by suicide have a psychiatric diagnosis; yet, little is known about the pe